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Wednesday 01 July 2009, San José, Costa Rica      // Home Page   • Contact Us  • Archives    • Site Search    • Subscribe To Our Newsletter 
• OAS Gives Honduran Coup Leaders 72 Hours To Reinstate Deposed President
• Interim Honduran President To Send Delegation For Talks With OAS
• Honduras' Supreme Court Orders Arrest of Pro-Zelaya Mayor
• Honduras on Strike against Coup
• Honduras' ambassadors to UN, OAS sacked, grenade hurled at Supreme Court
• Honduras' Micheletti Warns Deposed President Zelaya Not To Return
• Zelaya's Family Not To Be Barred From Leaving Honduras: Attorney General
• President Ma Meets With Panama's President-Elect
• Guatemalan Fears A Tweet Will Make Him A Jailbird
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CRISIS IN HONDURAS
Honduran Congress Suspend Civil Rights; Zelaya Vows To Return On Saturday

The Honduran Legislature approved earlier this afternoon a decree that suspends five of the rights of citizens in Honduras: the inviolable right of home, the freedom of association, a person can be held more than 24 hours without a charge and freedom of movement in the country.

The decree was presented to the Legislative Assembly by Roberto Micheletti, who was given the power of the presidency following the military coup d'etat last Sunday.

The decree approved by the Legislators virtually places the country under siege.

The measures are designed to prevent any demonstration on the streets of Honduras in the event deposed president Manuel Zelaya returns.

Zelaya, who is currently in Panama to take part in the investiture of Ricardo Martinelli as the new president of Panama, said he would respect the 72 hours deadline placed by the Organization of American States (OAS) on the Honduras to reinstate its president, before returning to his country possibly on Saturday.

Zelaya had said on Monday that he would return to Honduras on Thursday, but decided postpone his return after the announcement by the OAS.

The OAS said that it is firm that if Zelaya is not reinstated, it would suspend Honduras' membership to the OAS. In a separate move, the has frozen all credit, reported to be some $500 billion dollars, to Honduras.

Micheletti, for his part, is staying firm that Zelaya can return whenever he wishes, as a private citizen, but faces a battery of charges of criminal acts while president. Micheletti said the courts are ready to issue a warrant for Zelaya's arrest the moment he sets foot in Honduras.

Micheletti said that Zelaya had violated Honduran law and it was too late for him to avoid arrest if he returns to Honduras.

Micheletti also said he was worried about the possibility of invasion from other Latin American countries, although he did not say which ones.

"I was appointed by Congress, which represents the Honduran people. Nobody can make me resign unless I break the laws of the country," Micheletti said in an interview with The Associated Press at the presidential palace.

The United States said it has suspended joint military operations with Honduras, while the European Union has suspended the first round of free trade negotiations for the region, which were scheduled in Brussels next week.

 

 
 

"This was a plot by a very voracious elite, which wants to keep this country in an extreme level of poverty."


Honduran soldiers catching up on the news.
 
 


 

 

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